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LIGHTING FOR VIDEO PAUL MCCORMICK AD30400 VIDEO ART SPRING 2014

LIGHTING FOR VIDEO PAUL MCCORMICK AD30400 VIDEO ART SPRING 2014

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LIGHTING FOR VIDEOPAUL MCCORMICK

AD30400 VIDEO ART

SPRING 2014

OVERVIEW

• Identify the 4 most common types of lights

• Lighting hierarchy (main, fill, hair, background)

• Discuss common lighting arrays (3 and 4 Point)

• Location Lighting

INCANDESCENT

• Burns with a yellow/orange light.

• Inexpensive with a short burn life

• Low wattage

• Does not produce a great deal of light.

FLUORESCENT

• Widely used in the video industry

• Provides a soft, even light

• Large selection of color temperatures

HALOGEN OR QUARTZ

• Most prevalent light source used in video production

• Burns hot and bright and comes in high wattages

• Long burn life

• Intense heat and high power consumption

LED

• Low energy consumption with a high output

• Long burn life• Both on and

off camera options available

KIT INTRODUCTION

SPOT VS. FLOOD• Spot Light

• A narrow beam of light that often covers less than 45 degrees from source

• Used to highlight or accentuate

• Flood Light

• Wide beam that covers an area of up to 120 degrees from source

• Used to fill in shadows

MAIN OR KEY LIGHT• Key light is the most

important light in a standard lighting set up.

• The key light will be the hottest or brightest light its purpose is to highlight the subject

• 30 or 60-degree angle on the either side of the camera.

 

KEY LIGHT ONLY

Using only a key light will unevenly accentuate the subject while leaving your background flat and under lit

KEY LIGHT PLACEMENT • High Placement

• A key light placed above the subject projecting down will be felt as natural light and wont distort the shadows much.

• Low placement

• A key light placed below the subject projecting up will cast shadows on the face and elongate facial features giving the subject a dramatic effect.

FILL LIGHT

• Used to reduce contrast caused by the key light.

• Not as bright as key light

• Placed opposite of the key light at the same angle

HAIR OR KICK LIGHT

• Shines on the subject from behind

• Gives the subject a rim of light

• Separates the subject from the background and highlights contours

BACKGROUND LIGHT

• Illuminates background elements

• Placed very high or very low

• Creates Depth

THREE POINT SET UP WITH HAIR LIGHT

THREE POINT SET UP WITH BACKGROUND LIGHT

FOUR POINT SET UP

MODIFIERS • Barn Doors

• Facilitate shaping of the beam of light from the fixture• Umbrella

• Diffuses your light reducing harshness• Bounce

• Reflective surface used to bounce a concentrated beam of light

• Flag

• Object used to block light

SIMPLE LOCATION LIGHTING

• Using the sun and a bounce

• Bounce (spot) acts as key light

• Sun (flood) acts as fill and background

OTHER RESOURCES Strobist

http://strobist.blogspot.com/

Strobist Lighting 101

http://strobist.blogspot.com/2006/03/lighting-101.html

Vimeo Video School

http://vimeo.com/videoschool/

Online lighting diagram maker

http://www.lightingdiagrams.com/Creator

On Camera, Video Lighting for the Web

http://www.lynda.com/Business-Shooting-Video-tutorials/Camera-Webcam-Lighting-Techniques/108974-2.html?srchtrk=index%3a3%0alinktypeid%3a2%0aq%3alighting%0apage%3a1%0as%3arelevance%0asa%3atrue%0aproducttypeid%3a2